Dr. Brézé and his sons, all surgeons with limited abilities fight any competition on their sector with all means.Dr. Brézé and his sons, all surgeons with limited abilities fight any competition on their sector with all means.Dr. Brézé and his sons, all surgeons with limited abilities fight any competition on their sector with all means.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations
Photos
Antonio Ferrandis
- Le commissaire Giret
- (as Antonio Ferrandis Monrabal)
José María Prada
- Simon Mauvagne
- (as José Maria Prada Oterino)
Marie Marczack
- L'infirmière-secrétaire de Losseray
- (as Marie Marczak)
Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in One Hundred and One Nights (1995)
Featured review
The premise is the only redeeming part, and thanks to a great cast. It is most intriguing to have a story set in the medical society. The simple fact that private hospitals are run like businesses where patients are just customers leading to an invoice and a profit has potential as a dramatic subtext, especially with good surgeons, caring for their jobs and patients, at a loss in this "no holds barred" arena.
Unfortunately, as pointed by the two previous reviewers, the film-makers made two wrong choices. First we don't need to experience the backstory of 10 years before. The cutting back and forth is really distracting and it doesn't move the story forward. Then here lies the biggest problem: the story is pointless. Probably because Director Rouffio and his screenwriter Conchon were stuck with the true story it is based on. But the intercut flashbacks are at odds with a documentary approach. So we are left to be content with an anecdotal storyline.
Pity we didn't get a better movie with Piccoli, Depardieu and the rest. So much so that it is an endemic disease of French movies that the film-makers are so proud of their premise they don't care if the story leads somewhere.
Unfortunately, as pointed by the two previous reviewers, the film-makers made two wrong choices. First we don't need to experience the backstory of 10 years before. The cutting back and forth is really distracting and it doesn't move the story forward. Then here lies the biggest problem: the story is pointless. Probably because Director Rouffio and his screenwriter Conchon were stuck with the true story it is based on. But the intercut flashbacks are at odds with a documentary approach. So we are left to be content with an anecdotal storyline.
Pity we didn't get a better movie with Piccoli, Depardieu and the rest. So much so that it is an endemic disease of French movies that the film-makers are so proud of their premise they don't care if the story leads somewhere.
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Seven Deaths by Prescription
- Filming locations
- Rue Ernest Renan, Clermont-Ferrand, Puy-de-Dôme, France(interiors: Losserays' apartment)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 45 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was 7 morts sur ordonnance (1975) officially released in Canada in English?
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